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Moral Issues In Penology

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Title: Moral Issues In Penology


1
Moral Issues In Penology
2
Moral Issues in Jurisprudence The Bill of Rights
  • No right is held more sacred, or is more
    carefully guarded, by the common law, than the
    right of the individual to the possession and
    control of his own person, free from all
    restraint or interference from others, unless by
    clear and unquestionable authority of law.

3
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Every resolution to an ethical dilemma must
    consider the act, the intention, the
    circumstance, the principles, the beliefs, the
    outcomes, the virtues, the narrative, the
    community, and political structures.
  • Robert Nash
  • Argument for discretion at all levels of the CJ
    system

4
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Professional Demands
  • These demands are often the same but occasionally
    differ from expectations for any decent human
    being.

5
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Professional Demands
  • Public Official Ethics
  • Perform duties impartially and with due diligence
  • Professional integrity reflects on public
    confidence in the individual in particular and in
    the state generally

6
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Professional Demands
  • Public Official Ethics
  • Refrain from inappropriate political activity
  • It is expected that public officials not be
    influenced by a political favoritism

7
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Professional Demands
  • Public Official Ethics
  • The obligation to act impartially imposes a duty
    to make decisions based on the law and the facts
    and not be influenced by any other factors.

8
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Professional Demands
  • Public Official Ethics
  • Avoid impropriety and its appearance
  • Personal affairs are considered relevant in in
    evaluating integrity of public officials

9
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Trust requires trustworthiness.
  • Public Officials
  • Doctors
  • Police
  • Judges, Prosecutors and Defense Attorneys
  • Students and Teachers

10
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Consequentialist Theory Utilitarianism
  • Utilitarians argue that
  • 1. Other moral considerations such as duty,
    rights and justice are subordinated to, and their
    content determined by, the principle of utility.
  • 2. What is just is producing greatest utility.
  • 3. As circumstances change, consequences change,
    and so do our duties, rights and requirements of
    justice.

11
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Implications of Utilitarianism
  • 1. Act Utilitarian
  • Choose actions based on greatest balance of
    pleasure over pain
  • 2. Rule Utilitarian
  • Acts are permissible if they are not prohibited
    by the best set of rules.

12
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Criticisms of Utilitarianism
  • 1. Act Utilitarian -- Injustice
  • It is unjust to punish someone for something they
    did not do regardless of other beneficial
    consequences.
  • 2. Rule Utilitarian -- Limited Exceptions
  • It does not distinguish between morally
    obligatory acts and superogatory acts.

13
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Communitarianism Theory
  • Morality is defined by ideals that define and
    hold groups together.

14
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Implications of Communitarianism
  • 1. Groups establish their own norms.
  • 2. Morality becomes equivalent to group
    endorsement.

15
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Criticisms of Communitarianism
  • 1. Groups norms differ.
  • 2. Some group norms, such as racial or sexual
    discrimination, are wrong.

16
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Deontological Ethics
  • Morality involves more than only producing good
    consequences. Morally right actions are done
    because we have a duty to do them.

17
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Implications of Deontological Ethics
  • 1. Morality is not determined by the
    consequences of an action.
  • 2. Morality is determined by the test that the
    act would be acceptable in determining universal
    law.
  • 3. Actions that do not treat others with
    respect, but rather uses them as a means to an
    end, are wrong.

18
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Criticisms of Deontological Ethics
  • 1. It is complex and abstract.
  • 2. It does not resolve what is agreed to as
    acceptable to all people.

19
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Virtue Ethics
  • Morality is determined by individual goodness
    rather than goodness of rules or goals.

20
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Implications of Virtue Ethics
  • Right actions are determined only on the basis of
    their being right.

21
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Criticisms of Virtue Ethics
  • 1. It is simplistic and complex at the same
    time.
  • 2. It does not provide much help in deciding
    between moral dilemmas.

22
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Contractarianism
  • People agree to social contracts.
  • This is also a basis for examining morality.

23
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Implications of Contractarianism
  • 1. Contract determine obligations.
  • 2. The obligations are binding when parties to
    the contract fulfill their obligations.
  • 3. Does not allow sacrifice of the few for the
    good of the many.
  • 4. Emphasizes concrete benefits

24
Moral Issues in Penology
  • Criticisms of Contractarianism
  • 1. Implied contracts exist as a result of
    membership in the state.
  • 2. Majority rules in most instances.
  • 3. Some individual freedoms are sacrificed.

25
Break
  • Read Assignments
  • Participate in Class Discussions
  • Review Notes Weekly
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